clinical science

Aston University, Birmingham (Aston)

Here are the best resources to pass clinical science. Find clinical science study guides, notes, assignments, and much more.

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laboratory organisation
blood lipids
  • blood lipids

  • Lecture notes • 9 pages • 2024
  • Available in package deal
  • preview• Major biomolecules alongside proteins, carbohydrates and nucleic acids and lipids planned number of different roles within the body. • They are an important structural component to cells, and you know that in relation to phospholipids with their hydrophilic head and their hydrophobic tails and they subsequently form the main component of the plasma membrane. • They play an important role within metabolism and also in hormonal pathways, if we take metabolism as an example free fa...
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autoanalysers automation
  • autoanalysers automation

  • Lecture notes • 8 pages • 2024
  • Available in package deal
  • preview:• This lecture is about autoanalysers in relationship to biochemistry. • The clinical biochemistry laboratory is one of the most automated disciplines within pathology within BMS and because it performs the huge bulk of the entire workload received by the pathology department, it is important understand turnaround times and reflex testing. • Quality assurance – how do we know that the results we have obtained are accurate and reliable, what procedures do we have in place to ens...
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coagulation disorders
  • coagulation disorders

  • Lecture notes • 8 pages • 2024
  • Available in package deal
  • preview:● Glanzmann’s thrombasthenia – autosomal recessive so you have to inherit a faulty gene from mum and dad, and it is quite rare roughly around 1 in a million. ● Because it is an inherited condition patients will present with symptoms following birth therefore earlier in their life and these include nosebleeds, extensive bruising, bleeding gums, excessive bleeding during periods. ● It arises as we get defects in the glycoprotein 2b3a complex. ● Platelets express a number of ...
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sampling body fluid
  • sampling body fluid

  • Lecture notes • 8 pages • 2024
  • Available in package deal
  • preview:• It is important to have an understanding of the different diseases we look at within medical biochemistry laboratories and the different diagnostic tests we perform but it is equally as important to understand the difference specimen types to understand which samples we require for which diagnostic tests, which samples we can't process and why that is and it's also important as a BMS when you're analysing patient results as part of that to be able to rule out that these results ar...
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Point of care testing
  • Point of care testing

  • Lecture notes • 7 pages • 2024
  • Available in package deal
  • preview:• People who are living with diabetes generally use a small handheld device to monitor their blood glucose levels daily and therefore that's a form of point of care testing (POCT). • Why we have implemented POCT in some particular areas for some particular tests. • To provide examples and discuss sites where point of care testing plays a key role. • To talk about how we manage it and whether you are obtaining a result within a hospital laboratory on an analyser or whether y...
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overview of the NHS blood and transplant service
  • overview of the NHS blood and transplant service

  • Lecture notes • 7 pages • 2024
  • Available in package deal
  • preview:• They are unusual in that the natural occurring antibodies occur in the plasma of subjects who lack the corresponding antigen even if they’ve never been transfused or been pregnant. • The most important of these are anti-A and anti-B, they are usually IgM and react optimally at cold temperatures (4°) although they are reactive at 37° as well. • Immune antibodies develop in response to the introduction of RBCs that possess antigens that a person lacks, and this can occur duri...
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haemostasis
  • haemostasis

  • Lecture notes • 6 pages • 2024
  • Available in package deal
  • preview:• Haemostasis is coagulation. • 1 – of course, we want our blood to clot if we get an injury but why is it important that coagulation is only initiated when we get damage to a vessel wall, why is not a good thing if we were to bleed excessively and not control blood loss and why is it not a good thing if we have this increased tendency to clot spontaneously. • 2 – what are the different factors involved within coagulating or clotting blood, that ranges from platelets to coagu...
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transfusion reactions
  • transfusion reactions

  • Lecture notes • 6 pages • 2024
  • Available in package deal
  • preview:• Cross matching forms a key component of blood transfusion – it is ultimately what we do – we are gong to make sure the blood we give to a patient form the donor is compatible. • Many reasons when a blood transfusion is required form being involved in a road traffic accident or surgery (elective surgery where they might need blood) or for a patient that undergoes a major haemorrhage during surgery which was unpredictable and therefore will require lots of blood. Other reasons a...
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